‘I’m So Excited’: Bristol’s Scarlet Biancuzzo Wins Journalism Scholarship from Ocean State Media

The Barrington High School graduate heads to the University of Missouri to pursue her passion for storytelling and reporting

Share
‘I’m So Excited’: Bristol’s Scarlet Biancuzzo Wins Journalism Scholarship from Ocean State Media
Copy

Each summer, Rhode Island PBS and The Public’s Radio award a $60,000 college scholarship to a local high school graduate who is planning to pursue a career in journalism.

This year’s recipient is Scarlet Biancuzzo. She’s a Bristol native and a Barrington High School graduate. This fall she’ll enroll at the University of Missouri, one of the most prestigious journalism schools in the country.

Scarlett spoke with Morning Host Luis Hernandez about her professional aspirations.

Interview highlights

On how she became interested in journalism

Scarlett Biancuzzo: I went to Barrington High School, coming from Bristol. My mom works at Barrington High School. My dad works for the district. They were like, “I really think you should come to Barrington High School. I think it’s a great opportunity.” They’re like, “You get to choose a CTE pathway.”

I’ve always loved talking. Every report card I’ve ever gotten back has said, “Great student. Talks too much in class.” I turned to my mom. I was like, “So I can go to school to talk? Great.” And I was like, “I’ll do TV production.”

I applied for it and I got in and I started the classes and I just kind of went [thinking] maybe I will do it as a career. Who knows? And I fell in love with it immediately; the opportunity to speak and talk and not get in trouble for talking, but also meet so many people and learn so many people’s stories and experiences.

On her journalistic experiences in high school

Biancuzzo: Probably my proudest broadcasting piece I put together was interviewing a nurse at Newport Hospital. I showed up at Newport Hospital and I was like, “Can I interview someone here?” And they were like, “Yeah.” That was a great experience. I got to put together a piece about COVID-19 and the effect on healthcare workers.

Probably the coolest thing I ever got to do throughout my whole experience throughout the four years was an internship at the Rhode Island State House with Capitol TV and Margie Reed. I got to do an interview with a state senator from Pawtucket – Senator Acosta – about food insecurity throughout America and the importance of recognizing it.

On how young people today consume news

Biancuzzo: I do think young people care about the news, and I think that’s come to light with everything going on with the budget cuts and so many organizations being attacked and not having funding and everything. I think, through that, there’s been an increase of young people speaking up about it or becoming aware about it.

I think the biggest way you reach young people is through social media. I know I follow CNN, the Washington Post, New York Times, PBS, to kind of keep up with what’s going on. Instagram is such a great way to reach young people. Are you going to reach everyone? No. But I think you can reach a lot of young people through social media.

A visit to Vineyard Wind 1 raises questions about the company’s claims, with far fewer turbines spinning than reported and little explanation from project leaders
Ruling affirms state law that limits open-carry permits to those who can show a specific need
Meg Disanto, 42-year-old Providence resident, says the bridge traffic got so bad that she decided to have her kids change schools
Pope recognizes first miracle of his papacy, crediting prayers to a 19th-century Spanish priest for reviving an infant at a Pawtucket hospital
Illumina genomic sequencers were used widely by federal agencies and grantees, including URI researchers